Please limit your response to 1000 characters (approx. 150 words) each.
1. What has motivated you to stay in school and aspire to become a nurse?
Growing up I always wanted to be a nurse. I’ve never been the person to change my mind on a career every other year. I knew that nursing was going to be difficult. But that just made me want to become a nurse even more! No one in my family has gone to college, nor pushed me to go. I’ve always had a passion for helping others. I want to make a difference in the world. My desire to help others, and passion has motivated me to stay in school. However, a huge motivation has stemmed from my mother. She overcame her meth amphetamine addiction on her own after struggling for years. Since she has been
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Honestly, I am that person who just loves everything. It has been difficult for me to determine what I want to do next. I have so many goals, visions, and dreams of how I can make the world a better place. I think about how I can have the greatest impact on people. I honestly want to do it all. I want to travel, educate, and inspire people who need it. Upon graduation I plan to work on an Indian reservation to give back to my culture. I resonate greatly with the holistic health model involving mind, spirit, and body. My goal one day is to attend a naturopathic school of medicine. I want to travel around the world and learn about natural medicine from others, and blend ideas into western medicine. My goal is to provide safer, cost effective, and accessible medicine to large amounts of …show more content…
Educating and teaching the community preventive measures about health has positive impacts on everyone. Within nursing school, I am a crimson member and officer. Crimson scrubs is responsible for all community involvement in nursing school. The officer’s duty is to plan, coordinate, and carry out the events. We have participated in many events including: first aid booths, diabetes fairs, 5k runs, marathons, preventive presentations, and many more. At home in my community I volunteer at the food bank, AA events to support my mom, and at an assisted living center. I also am a WSNA member, and just attended the convention that was held in Olympia. We spoke to legislators about specific laws and how their support is needed to pass them. The laws discussed were health-care related and would have a positive impact on the
I am Amanda Selich, 27 years old, and have been living in San Francisco for roughly 10 years. I grew up in the East Bay with my 3 siblings and was raised by a single father. Much of my childhood was spent taking care of my younger siblings. This responsibility was so demanding I was forced to drop out of high school and become their “surrogate mother”. However at the age of 24 I was able to get my GED and finally attend college. In fact this past May I graduated from City College of San Francisco with highest honors in Science and Math.
The field I am going into is very versatile and large. I plan on going into the nursing field; I will be majoring as a nurse practitioner and minoring in orthopedic nursing. I plan on doing this because I have always been fascinated with the way the body works and how God designed us. When I was in eighth grade, I had patella tendonitis, and in eleventh grade I was diagnosed with clinical rheumatoid arthritis. Those events were what steered my dreams of being a nurse into a specific place. I am going into the field of nursing to learn about the problems my body has, to figure out how to help people with the same problems as me, and help people who face other diagnoses. In this paper, I will be describing the backstory
I remember sitting in my advising meeting with my guidance counselor in high school talking about my Senior Packet. One of the questions she had asked me was “What do you want to be?” I remember answering her confidently and saying “I want to be a neonatal nurse.” For as long as I could remember, I always knew I wanted to be a nurse. My mother telling me about the amazing nurses that took care of me while I was a premature baby was so inspiring. I knew that I wanted to help people and work with babies. After getting rejected from every nursing program I applied to my senior year of high school I knew that my dream of becoming a nurse was going to be very difficult.
Please first address what or who has influenced your decision to pursue a career in healthcare?
Growing up I knew I wanted to be someone that helped others. There are many careers with this expertise. Being a teacher, police officer, or even a lifeguard, but I personally want to be a prenatal nurse. Seeing my mom in the Army and helping with a younger sister that was born with cerebral palsy helped to mold me into wanting to be a person that can make a difference. But with becoming a nurse I know there are many responsibilities I have to keep in mind.
My nursing career has been a journey full of gratification and personal success. Six years of bedside nursing has taught me how essential teamwork and communication is when working to restore health in the critically ill. Today I find myself ready to advance my career into a Master’s Degree. Advancing my career will grant me with the opportunity to service my community and allow me to treat my patient’s holistic needs. As an advanced practice nurse, I plan to use my knowledge to further educate, reinforce and advocate for those in need. By accepting my application to the Adult/Gerontology Acute Care Nurse Practitioner program you will provide me with the opportunity I need to expand my caring journey.
Receiving a post-secondary education will benefit me by providing the knowledge and skills I need to become a skillful pediatric nurse. As a child, my passion was always to become a nurse to provide holistic care for children not only in my community but around the world to medically underserved populations. To reach my goal, I plan to attend Miami Dade college for two years at the medical campus to become a Registered nurse and earn my Associate of nursing degree, afterwards pass the NCLEX-RN exam. Posterior to graduate, I will transfer to the Duke University school of nursing in North Carolina to earn my Bachelor of science nursing degree.
To become a nurse you need to have a bachelor's degree or associate's degree in nursing it all depends on what type of nurse you want to be, there are different kinds of nurses. Each nurse is entitled to different kind of jobs it all depends on the nurse you want to become. The Nursing Career Overview is basically going over the nursing of what kinds of job the nurse does. For example, if you want to be a registered nurse you need to have a bachelor's degree or associate's degree. Plus you have to have 4 years of school done and you have to have a great attitude and be kind and nice to other people in order for them to respect you. You treat others the way you would want to be treated, It’s the same in and out of the nursing field. There are
Born the third of eight children, my highly traditional Mennonite parents raised me to follow the roles and rules of the church and I was homeschooled all twelve years of schooling. As a female, college, a career, and working outside the home was not encouraged by the church or my parents. Yet, when I turned eighteen, I learned of a job opportunity as a caregiver and accepted the part-time position. This job ultimately changed my life. For two years, I cared for a beloved elderly lady. I found extreme satisfaction in providing bedside care, and my dream of becoming a nurse was born. Shortly before she passed away, I remember holding that dear woman’s frail hand. She whispered to me, “You need to become a nurse. You are smart, you are strong, and you can help change the world.” I had so many doubts, but I felt the calling to become a nurse and had a deep desire in my heart
When I began my research for the senior project I expected to find out what a day in the life of a nurse really is, but I was surprised when my mentor Vicki summed up the truth for the hardest part about the job saying, “You won’t save everyone, you can’t be everyone’s friend, and you won’t be okay at the end of every day”. Every job has pros and cons, but being a nurse isn’t just a job- it’s a lifestyle, and it isn’t for everyone with the preconception that they really are cut out for it.
In today’s society many people get into a field because of the salary however, in other cases people get into a field because they have a passion for something. The passion that drives me to become a nurse practitioner is the love that I developed for science when I was in Elementary school. I knew that science related to the medical field, and that’s something I have always admired, and it was the perfect way to help the community and continue to develop my love for science. However, I didn’t know if becoming a nurse was the right choice for me, but once I started to do research I realized that I was going in the right journey. Although I know that becoming a nurse isn’t easy, but I have the mindset that one day I’ll accomplish my goal.
My career goal is to become a nurse. Why? Because I love helping others and it shows that I care about others than myself. What do nurses do? Nurses deliver and monitor patient care, teach patients and family members about their health. They also work with healthy people by providing health care material and more. What kinds of skills are required? Nurses must have kindness, patience, good critical thinking skills, and must be able to function in high-stress situations. Every state require nurses to complete some degree of formal training through accredited nursing schools, but most of the time they’re looking for applicants with specialized guarantees. Credentials usually cover specific health care areas or patient populations. Here are some
Nursing is a extremely challenging and demanding career, however I feel the rewards of assisting others would be great and that I am prepared to board on this profession. I am enthusiastic to pursue a career in which I am able to support and care for people, becoming a nurse would permit me to fulfill this ambition also makes a difference in populations' lives on a daily basis I believe that this course can teach me to further my interest. In the nursing occupation, dealing with many features of patient care is a must but I believe I am able to handle the difficulties as I also enjoy the change in the routine and I believe it could take me further in many aspects of life.
My motives behind choosing my career in nursing were watching members of my family work so hard to become nurses today. When I was a child, all I've ever wanted was to grow up and become a nurse. I wanted to pursue this career because of my mother who was and still, is a nurse. I remember, ever since I was in the about the fifth grade, my plans of getting my Bachelors
1 When you’re young you’re taught that you can be anything you want to be when you grow up. Knowing that you have such a wide variety to choose from you probably changed what you wanted to be daily. I wasn’t that way. When I was six I decided that I wanted to be a nurse. Nursing is a profession for anyone, which is one thing that I believe, sets it apart from others. I set this goal for myself at a pretty young age and I am so excited to be on my way to achieving it. Nursing is for anyone no matter who you are.